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The opening matches at the 2018 ATP Finals led to a debate over whether conditions at the O2 Arena were trickier than in past years: Novak Djokovic ended it.
The Wimbledon and U.S. Open champion made an impressive start to his campaign for a sixth title by dismissing John Isner 6-4, 6-3 on Monday.
Roger Federer, who lost on Sunday, and Alexander Zverev described conditions as challenging following their error-strewn opening matches at the season-ending tournament, but Djokovic dropped just six points on his serve and made six unforced errors.
A day after a ceremony to mark ending the season as No. 1, Djokovic underlined his status by nullifying his American opponent's usually destructive serve.
Isner, who at 33 became the season-ending tournament's oldest debutant since 1972, applied himself admirably but barely avoided being broken more than once in the first set, and was broken twice more in the second set.
"It was amazing," Isner said of the atmosphere. "I wish I could have given them a bit more to cheer for."
The one break Djokovic converted in the first set, at 2-2, was a cross-court forehand return winner which stranded Isner.
Cristiano Ronaldo was in attendance, with Djokovic perhaps spurred on even more by the Juventus forward's presence.
"It's great to have big football star, sports star like him, courtside watching tennis," Djokovic said.
At 3-3, 15-30 in the second set, Isner sent down a second serve at 126 mph (203 kph). Djokovic sent it straight back at his feet and a shocked Isner hit his backhand long to concede two more break points.
A forehand error from Isner confirmed the break, and the end of the contest. The merciless Djokovic held serve before breaking Isner once more with an inch-perfect backhand passing shot on match point.
Earlier, world number 5 Alexander Zverev came from a break down in both sets to defeat Marin Cilic 7-6 (5), 7-6 (1).
Facing each other in their opening match for a second straight year, Zverev produced the slightly steadier tennis in an attritional contest to extend his record against Cilic to 2-0 at the O2 Arena and 6-1 overall.
Cilic, who made 46 unforced errors, dropped to 1-9 across his four appearances at the tournament.
"The win, that's the most important thing," said Zverev, who failed to advance from the round-robin stage on his debut last year.
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